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In the great Desperado movie series almost the entire cast were Latino, and the one that didn’t stand up to the quality was the one with Depp. I wish Alcaraz would get off his pity platform and get a economic degree. Movies are made to make money, producers and directors always have the dollar in mind. Which is why you’ll see very few gringos in the Mexican film industry. If he wants Hollywood movies cast by population percentages maybe he should start funding one, that way it would be his money lost, when the film flops.

Again – []Zoe Saldana is in “Guardians” as a major character, and she’ll be back in theatres this October (opposite Diego Luna) in “Book of Life”. This is on top of January’s “Paranormal Activity: The Marked Ones”, which had a primarily Hispanic cast.[]So we’re going to have three major movies this year with Hispanic talent in the lead roles.

I’m not talking about volunteers to take kids in. I’m talking about all the people on here and in places like Murrieta who are screaming to send them back. And yes, most of those kids came to the US already having somebody here to take them in. Which undermines the arguments of those screamers even more.

DC Comics used to do this with their Legion of Superheroes feature—“We’re diverse, we have green orange and blue people!” In fact, the blue-skinned person (Shadow Lass) came about partially because the writer at the time (Jim Shooter) was told he could not have any brown-skinned characters so as not to offend Southern readers. (“We’re not racist, but our audience is, and we have to cater to them.”)

About La Cucaracha

La Cucaracha is a unique strip that provides a view of the world through the sharp, satiric lens of its young Latino characters and the fertile mind of acclaimed creator Lalo Alcaraz. Growing up on the U.S./Mexico border gave Lalo a dual outlook on life. He’s not "Mexican" enough for his relatives in Mexico and not "American" enough for some in the U.S.A. It’s this double-edged Spanglish attitude that fuels this jalapeño-biting satirical observations in his daily comic strip, La Cucaracha.